Dr. W. Kermit Chapman
D?ntl?t
Offloe# in
BOYD BUILDINQ ?
Waynetvllle, N. C. Phon# |63
That Nas^in^
Backache
May Warn of Disordered
Kidney Action
Modern life with its hurry and worry,
irregular habits, improper eating and
drinking?its risk of exposure and infec- I
tion?throws heavy strain on the work
of the kidneya. They are apt to become
over-taxed and fail to filter excess acid
and other impuritiea from the life-giving
blood.
You may aufTer nagging backache,
headache, dizziness, getting up nighta,
leg paina, swelling?feel constantly
tired, nervous, all worn out. Other signs
of kidney or bladder diaorder are some
timea burning, scanty or too frequent
urination.
Try Doan'a Pill*. Doon'% help the
kidneyc to pass off harmful exeeas boriy
waste. They have had mora than half a
century of public approval. Are recom
mended by grateful uaera everywhere.
A*k your neighbor I
4
QUALLA NEWS
Mr. Estes Tolbert and Mrs. Ed
Oxner spent the week-end with
their parents at Blowing Hock.
Mr. Charles Stillwell, who is
employed in Virginia, spent the
week-end with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Zell Stillwell.
Mrs. Minnie Kinsland spent last
week with Mr. and Mrs. Ted Kins
land in Ashevilte.
Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Snyder of
Gastonia are spending a few days
with relatives here.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Gibson spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Gibson.
Mr. Clayton Calhoun of Gas
tonia spent the week-end with
his parents, M"r. and Mrs. John
Calhoun.
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Jenkins call
ed on Mr. and Mrs. Penn Keener,
Sunday afternoon.
Rev. L. J. Rogers and Rev. Vir
gil McClure were the guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Sitton, Sunday.
Mrs. Frank Cordell spent Satur
day with Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Reagan and family.
The production of flue-cured
tobacco in North Carolina is now
estimated at 887,460,000 pounds.
FARM FOR SALE IN GREENVILLE CO., S.
151 Acres, one large 7-room, 2-story house with lighta
and water, electric pump. One 6-room house, 3 good
barns. This property is about 13 miles from Green
ville on a good paved highway ... 100 acres in culti
vation, 25 acres in woods and 25 in pasture.
There is no place in the entire South that has more
to offer in the way of^good land, good schools, and a
bigger variety of industrial plants than this section.
Plenty of smaller farms and homes of all classes.
80 YEAR8 EXPERIENCE HANDLING REAL E8TATE.
C. V. Lathan
211 Blue Bldg.
Phone 337 Greenville, S.
J 1, '
u?-^w tbi^Sp
YOU TELL US...
When you drive in, tell jus what you want and
you'll get it! We wouldn't dream of high-pres
suring you into getting anything you don't need.
Auto service is our sole business; and we serve
you so well thafbur "service is our best sales talk!
Washing, Greasing, Polishing, checking Batteries,
Tires and Lights are just a few of the many serv
ices we render. Drive in today for complete Auto
Service.
NEW TIRES ... RECAPS
600-16 RECAPS FOR ONLY
$5.00
?
Others priced accordingly. Our Recaps guaran
teed to outwear New Tires. A New Tire FREE if
one of our Recaps comes off.
?
Jack & Howard Allison
O.K. Rubber Welders
Standard Gas and Oil. Atlas Tires
Phone 136 Sylva,,N. C.
At the Churches
Sylva Methodist
(The Rev. W. Q. Grlgg, Pastor)
Sunday school wili meet at 10
a. m., Gudger Crawforu, superin
tendent.
11 a. m. Morning worship with
the pastor in charge.
\&30 p. ra.t Youth Fellowship.
/Wednesday 7:30 p. m. Choir Re
hearsal.
Sylva Baptist
(The Rev. C. M. Warren, Pastor)
Sunday school at 10 a. m., How
ard Ball, Supt.
11 a. m. Morning worship, the
pastor using as his sermon subject
the Light of the Soul. Luke 11:33
36.
B. T. U. at 6:30 p. m., Carl Cor
bin, dir2ctor.
7:30 p. m. Evening worship with
the pastor speaking on Jesus, Hie
Name. Philippians 2:9.
Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. Prayer meet
ing.
Friday., 7:30 p. m. choir rehearsal.
Each Monday at 10:30 a. m. the
Baptist Ministers' . Conference
meets here.
Cullowhee Baptist
(The Rev. Mark R. Osborne, Jr.
Pastor)
9:50 a. m. Sunday School
11 a. m. Morning worship.
6 p. m. Intermediate and Young
People's BTU. '
Wednesday?7:30 p. m. Mid week
Prayer service
Friday?8 p. m. Choir Rehearsal
Cullowhee Methodist
(The Rev. R. T. Houts, Jr+ Pastor)
10 a. m. church school.
11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m.-Rev. C.
.Kay Jordan will be the guest speak
er.
7:30 p. m. Wesley Foundation
Sylva Presbyterian
Services held in Episcopal
church.
11 a. m. Morning worship with
the Rev. W. H. Wakefield of Dil
lingham in charge of the service.
Scotts Creek Baptist
(The Rev. B. 8. Hensley, Pastor.
10 p. m. Sunday School.
11 a. m. Morning worship by the
pastor.
6:30 p. m. Baptist Training Union
8 p. m. Evening worship.
Tuckaseigee Baptist
(Rev. Edgar Willix, Pastor)
Sunday School each Sunday at
10 a. m.
Worship service at 11 a. m. and
7:30 p. m. each 2nd and 4th Sun
days.? ?
Cashiers Baptist
(Rev. Edgar Willix, Pastor)
Sunday School each Sunday at
10 a. m.
Worship service each 1st and 3rd
Sundays at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m.
iST. John's Catholic ChurcF
Schedule of Masses
Waynesyille,every Sunday
11:00 a. m
Bryson City, every Sunday
8:00 a. m
Canton, 5th Sunday 8:00 a. m
Cherokee, 3rd Sunday... 8:00 a. m
Cullowhee, 2nd Sunday
8:00 a. m
Fontana Dam, every Sunday
11:00 a. m
Franklin, every Sunday
8:00 a. m
Highlands, every Sunday
11:00 a. m.
Sylva, 4th Sunday 8:00 a. m.
Tuckaseigee Asso. S. S.
Convention Sun., Oct. 12
The Tuckaseigee Baptist Asso
ciation Sunday School convention
will be held Sunday afternoon,
Oct. 12, at the Speedwell Baptist
j church. The meeting is scheduled
to begin at 2:30 p. m. and it is
hoped that all the churches of the
Association will have representa
tives present.
A research proje^, seeking ways
and means to reduce costs of feeds
by developing and promoting the
construction of more efficient
marketing facilities, has been ap
proved by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture under the Research and
Marketing Act of 1946. .
SaveUpTo SO PerCt.
AT
1
i
Western Auto
Associotc Store
Clyde Erwin Speaks To Group
On Saving Resources At
Resource-Use Conferenec
BY AL BOOZE
Our past and present reckless
wastage of our human and natural
resources, and the urgent need to
do something to check that wast
age, to reverse"the trend and build
up our natural wealth, was the
theme of a conference on Re
source-use education held at West
ern Carolina Teachers college re
cently.
"Generations of the past have
been largely interested in only
their own welfare," said Clyde A.
Erwin, superintendent of public
instructions in North Carolina, and
Chairman of the North Carolina
Resource-use Education Commis
sion, principle speaker at the con
ference. "But now that we real
ize that our resources are limit
ed we know that we ifiust plan
for future generations."
Mr. Erwin reminded the group
that all life on this planet is de
pendent upon a 9-inch blanket of
soil, and that it is estimated that
we have already wasted half of
it. At our present rate of use, he
said, most of our important nat
ural resources would be depleted
in 300 years.
If you go east from Cairo,
Egypt,7 he observed, "you will
| pass the remains of 500 cities, each
of which was once great, and each
of which is a monument to wast
ed resources.
"In our own state three cities,
Winston-Salem, Greensboro, and
High Point, are faced with a short
age of usable water in the near
future, and will have to look to
the mountains for a supply. The
Yadkin river is becoming so load
ed with valuable top-soil that it
will soon be unfit for use."
He pointed out that our great
wheat lands could, by a slight low
ering of water level in the soil, be
come a dustbowl, and that instead
of exporting food to hungry na
tions we could be asking other
countries to send us food.
We have been as unmindful
of our human resources as our
natural ones," he stated. "Hun
dreds of thousands, of our people
suffer disability and death from
preventable accidents and sick
ness. Country shanties and- city
slums breed frustration and crime.
Alcoholism takes its toll."
He said that only through ed
ucation could we hope to stem the
tide, and that it should work, to
gether with technology and cap
ital, to improve the situation. *
"There is in man," he declar
ed, "the only evidence of infinity
to be found on this earth. If he
sets his mind to it, what couldn't
he do to give people a fuller, hap
pier, longer life; to improve our
land, our forests, our streams; to
make our exhaustible resources,
such as oil and coal, last longer?
He is already reaching into such
fields as ocean agriculture and
microbe domestication."
William McClothlin, Training
and Education Relations Division,
addressed the meeting on
^s Stake in Resource
use Education."
"The significance, of this meet
ing, ' he said, 4,is that the South is
now willing to look objectively at
itself, and to do something about
the defects it discovers."
He stressed the need of develop
ing Southern resources for the
benefits $f Southern people. This
should be done, he said, by re
search, and by educating the peo
ple in the facts discovered by re
search.
Education can be the dead hand
of tihe past," he remarked. "I
think we would like to make it
the finger pointing to the future.
It should put together facts dis
covered by research, draw con
clusions, and find feasible and ef
J fective solutions of our problems "
He said that the South is re
versing the trend of exporting its
competent and ambitious young
people. They are finding oppor
tunity at home, and they should
%syir/ib*
Sams
in ...t. . ..A little Va-tro-nol
in each nostril quickly opens ud
Passages to relieve stuffy
fin^fi congestion, rest
ful sleep Relieves sniffly, sneesy
distress of head colds. Follow direc
tions in the package. Try. it!
VNKS VA-TRO-NOL
find more.
He explained that there are
four areas of respurce conserva
tions: research, education, plan
ning, and action. "The South is -
overcoming its fear of planning
in this field," he observed, "and
is planning and acting to such an
extent that the rest of the United '
States is looking to it for leader
ship in this field."
W. E. Bird, dean of the College,
speaking on "North Carolina Plans
for Resource-use Education," said
that the state's program for Re
source-use education is "an old
concept with a new slant."
He recalled that the first state
wide conference on the subject,
sponsored by the University of
North Carolina in 1944, used ma
terial furnished largely by this-'
cdllege. "What we didn't have,"
he remarked, "We went out and
borrowed."
He said that this region became
especially conscious of the deple
tion of its human and natural re
sources during, the recent war,
when it could not do its full part
in the war.
"We decided," he said, "that
Resource-use education should be
made a definite part of the ed
ucation of our children."
Other speakers at the morning
session of the conference were Dr.
R. L. Weaver, program director,
North Carolina Resource-use Ed
ucation," Commission, who spoke
on "North Carolina Plans for Re
sources-use Education," and Dr.
H.T. Hunter, president of the col
lege, who delivered the welcoming
address.
In his brief talk, Dr. Hunter em
p>hasize4 his school's friendliness,
sense of responsibility, faith in
the people of Western North Car
olina, vision, and its "bold, dar
ing, adventuresome spirit; its ocur
age to experiment."
The afternoon session of the
conference was given over to the
making df concrete plans for the
future. Dr. J. Henry Highsmith,
chairman Resource-use Commit
tee, Public school program, pre
sided. Representatives of exten
sion, forestry, health, welfare,
schools* P. T. A., and soil conser
vation groups took part.
A large committee, made up of
persons in the above activities,
and under the chairmanship of W.
B. Harrill, Director of Public Re
lations and Personnel at Western
Carolina Teachers College, to act
as advisor in setting up a pro
gram for. resource-use education.
Nearly 100 persons attended the
conference, including T. C. Robin
son, Buncombe County superin
tendent of schools, and* Asheville's
superintendent of public welfare,
George H. Lawrence.
FOR SALE
J
Garage apartment built in April. Very modern, in
sulated. Located on Freeze Hill on concrete road
with 312 foot frontage. Garden and poultry house.
All city utilities. Priced below cost. $2,000.00 down
payment. FHA will carry balance for 15 years.
Inquire BROWN at Owl Grill, Sylva, N. C.
TRADE IN THOSE THIN ?" 7
TIRES TODAY ON....
NEW
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. duce the risk ol blowouts,
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AGE AVERAGED Df ACTUAL
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? WIDER, FLATTER TREAD
? HUSKIER SHOULDER
DESIGN
$14.40
Plue Tax 6.00x16
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$1.25 a Week
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tlx* 6.00x16
NEW TIRES DESERVE NEW TUBES
GOOD^IAR
TIRES ^
CANNON BROTHERS
Goodyear Store
8YLVA, N. C.
YOU'LL SAVE MONEY AT
TRUCK HEADQUARTERS |
WITH
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DOD
PAVERS
PREFER'''
the Safety and Cemfert of Dodge GABS!
? "AIR-O-SPRING" seats
?adjustable to every
X driver's comfort!
? Ventilating wings . . ?
real ventilation When
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? All-weather insulation
? thorough weather
stripping!
? Steel welded to steel. %.
braced with steel at
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COGDILL MOTOR COMPANY
? /
Mill and Main Streets Sylva, N. C.
i ? -
* 1 . \